Let’s face it: You got thousands of HTML tags to choose from but some really helpful ones (<tabs>, <side-drawer>, <modal>, …) are missing.

What if you could build your own HTML tags?

Without frameworks like Angular, libraries like React or expert JavaScript knowledge in general. Just with a magic, native-JavaScript feature called “Web Components” (or “custom HTML elements”).

Web Components are a combination of various specifications that are baked into the browser. Getting started with these features is a breeze and you’ll quickly be able to build your own powerful and re-usable (even across projects!) custom HTML elements.

Such custom elements don’t replace Angular, React or Vue though – instead you can easily use them in ANY web project, including projects using such frameworks and libraries.

In this course, you’ll learn this from scratch.

But we won’t stop there. Whilst getting started is fairly easy, more complex components will be more difficult to create. Stencil.js is a tool that makes the creation of such native web components much easier by using modern features like TypeScript and JSX (don’t know that? No worries, you’ll learn it in the course!).

In detail, in this course you will learn:

how to build re-usable, lightweight custom HTML elements with native browser features

how to build web components of all complexities – from a simple tooltip to modals or side drawers

how to pass data into your own web components and use it there

how to emit your own custom events which you can listen to in JavaScript

how to use the Shadow DOM to scope your CSS styles to your custom elements

how to use Stencil.js to get a much easier development workflow

how to use the many features Stencil.js provides to build native web components way more efficiently

how to deploy/ re-use your own web components in ANY project using ANY JavaScript framework like Angular, React or Vue (or none at all!)

Prerequisites:

Basic JavaScript knowledge is a must-have

ES6 JavaScript knowledge (const, let, classes, …) is strongly recommended but not strictly required – a brief refresher is provided as part of the course